16 October 2013

It's all your fault! The ultimate cyclist troll?

| Holden Caulfield
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On Ride2Work day it’s probably worth having a chat about a proposal from Pedal Power, who would like the national road rules changed to:

“place the responsibility for a crash involving a bicycle and another vehicle on the driver of the other vehicle, unless the driver can prove that the person on the bicycle was clearly at fault – so that the person in the most dangerous vehicle has the most responsibility”

That claim forms a small part of their submission to the Vulnerable Road Users Inquiry. You can read Pedal Power’s full 36 page document here.

Despite a bit of “steel cocoon” rhetoric there’s some decent points being made. The Riot Act even gets a mention!

Of course, most motorist v cyclist problems could be solved if more road users, regardless of their mode of transport, were prepared to chill a little and act with a greater sense of calm and cooperation.

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wildturkeycanoe said :

Northbourne lanes are so tight, that is a truck or bus was in the middle lane, you’d have to be driving in the bike lane to go passed them in the left anyway. What happens to cyclists when a bus is stopped in the bike lane? Do they sit there and wait for the bus, or hit the footpath and go around? Really, I want to know, because as a car driver I find a constantly stopping vehicle requires overtaking, which on a busy Northbourne Ave. is almost impossible.

I dont ride Northbourne much but when I have I have either slowed down and waited because there has been enough distance or picked my time and passed the bus. This is relatievely easy if you give everybody around you plenty of time to find out what your intentions are (with signals & such). As a pushbike, you can do the passing manouver without even leaing the left lane.

Mind you, if I was plodding long at 15km/h, that would piss people off. I am normally doing between 30 -35 which, when its busy, isnt much slower than the traffic flow.

The few times I have done it I have generally managed to keep with the same group of vehicles, especially down the
City end where the traffic lights are closer together.

wildturkeycanoe7:12 am 18 Oct 13

MrBigEars said :

wildturkeycanoe said :

No, I am not in the middle lane, I am in the left lane, looking to turn left into say – Barry Drive. Because I am in the left lane and doing say 50km/h as I approach the left hand turn slip lane, I am probably looking first to see if a pedestrian is crossing to the island, then looking right to see if any traffic is coming through the intersection. Because there wasn’t any cyclist to my left in the 100 meters or so before getting to the intersection, I have no need to check to the left. Yet, in the time it has taken me to slow down, check crossing and intersection, the cyclist I passed half way back down the block has caught up and comes up to meet my left front fender with a lot of yelling and cursing.

Unless you’ve just passed a cyclist, you’re allowed to drive 50m in a bicycle lane before turning left, which in your scenario is a bit under half way down the block from Bunda Street. As long as you are giving everyone time and space to react and indicating appropriately, I think this removes a lot of the ambiguity and is the safest option for all.

Northbourne lanes are so tight, that is a truck or bus was in the middle lane, you’d have to be driving in the bike lane to go passed them in the left anyway. What happens to cyclists when a bus is stopped in the bike lane? Do they sit there and wait for the bus, or hit the footpath and go around? Really, I want to know, because as a car driver I find a constantly stopping vehicle requires overtaking, which on a busy Northbourne Ave. is almost impossible.

wildturkeycanoe said :

No, I am not in the middle lane, I am in the left lane, looking to turn left into say – Barry Drive. Because I am in the left lane and doing say 50km/h as I approach the left hand turn slip lane, I am probably looking first to see if a pedestrian is crossing to the island, then looking right to see if any traffic is coming through the intersection. Because there wasn’t any cyclist to my left in the 100 meters or so before getting to the intersection, I have no need to check to the left. Yet, in the time it has taken me to slow down, check crossing and intersection, the cyclist I passed half way back down the block has caught up and comes up to meet my left front fender with a lot of yelling and cursing.

Unless you’ve just passed a cyclist, you’re allowed to drive 50m in a bicycle lane before turning left, which in your scenario is a bit under half way down the block from Bunda Street. As long as you are giving everyone time and space to react and indicating appropriately, I think this removes a lot of the ambiguity and is the safest option for all.

Holden Caulfield11:18 am 17 Oct 13

KB1971 said :

Here is a question for people, bear with me and put the legal argument aside, just use the safey aregument:

What is worse, a partially loaded semi trailer accellerating to get a light and ends up runing a red or a cyclist stopping waiting for the traffic to clear & then running the red light, or using the pedestrian corssing to cheat a red?

Disclaimer: the truck was an overlength float designed to carry bulldozers & such, wone of two vehicles I saw run red lights this morning.

It’s an interesting point. Raising the safety issue like that when we’re talking about an ~80kg rider/bike combination on the same piece of road as a 30 tonne* truck.

*How much does a big truck weigh?

A while back an electrician said to me he couldn’t remove his shoes to help protect my newly laid and sealed timber floor because it was against OH&S regs for him to climb a ladder without footwear. But bikes, cars, trucks on the same road separated by a strip of paint, sure, no problems! You’d be mad if you didn’t.

By any sane measure a cyclist preaching about safety would never ride on the road.

Come to think of it, motorists should probably steer clear as well, haha. Which brings us to acceptable risk and what each individual is prepared to take.

Humans can be really stupid sometimes.

thebrownstreak6911:03 am 17 Oct 13

KB1971 said :

Normally if a cyclist ‘appears out of nowhere’ the driver would have passed them at some point in the last minute. If the fact that the cyclist is there and the car driver has forgotten within a minute that is crux of the issue and why PP think this is a good idea.

The only times I have a cyclist ‘appear out of nowhere’ has been where they have shot out onto the road from a bike path, foot path, driveway or similar.

Normally when bikes and cars are going the same direction there aren’t any problems. The cyclist moves over and the car passes if it’s safe, or waits until it is.

blueterrestra said :

OpenYourMind said :

Funnily enough what usually happens at the pedestrian crossings is 1. bike slows down and makes eye contact with driver 2. Driver waves bike through.

For the most part this works for all concerned.

Spot on – this is what happens at least nine times out of ten.

I know I don’t have right of way at a pedestrian crossing – most cyclists understand this. When I approach one I’ll slow down until I can clearly see if there are cars coming; if not, I ride through, otherwise I’ll stop. Most of the time an approaching car will give a wave through and I’ll return the wave (thanks!) and we’re all happy. If on the other hand driver wants to proceed through and not wait for me because I’m still on the bike, then that’s their right and I’ll respect that.

I think most drivers understand that if I get off the bike and walk I’ll take longer. Waving me through saves everyone time. Win-win.

The bottom line is that riding across a pedestrian crossing is akin to jay-walking – we shouldn’t do it but everyone does, and most of the time it’s pain free, but if you get hit by a car on your bike on a pedestrian crossing you’ve got no one to blame but yourself.

Correct.

This is how it should, and for the most part does work.

drfelonious said :

How’s your Jim’s Mowing franchise going harvyk1?

It’s going quite nicely, thanks for asking 🙂

Here is a question for people, bear with me and put the legal argument aside, just use the safey aregument:

What is worse, a partially loaded semi trailer accellerating to get a light and ends up runing a red or a cyclist stopping waiting for the traffic to clear & then running the red light, or using the pedestrian corssing to cheat a red?

Disclaimer: the truck was an overlength float designed to carry bulldozers & such, wone of two vehicles I saw run red lights this morning.

wildturkeycanoe said :

No, I am not in the middle lane, I am in the left lane, looking to turn left into say – Barry Drive. Because I am in the left lane and doing say 50km/h as I approach the left hand turn slip lane, I am probably looking first to see if a pedestrian is crossing to the island, then looking right to see if any traffic is coming through the intersection. Because there wasn’t any cyclist to my left in the 100 meters or so before getting to the intersection, I have no need to check to the left. Yet, in the time it has taken me to slow down, check crossing and intersection, the cyclist I passed half way back down the block has caught up and comes up to meet my left front fender with a lot of yelling and cursing. If I had to wait for a pedestrian at the crossing, I’d be blocking the bike lane and said cyclist would then whiz through the crossing as well, instead of politely waiting for me to move on.
It’s just a me, me, me attitude with cyclists, wanting right of way no matter which way they want to go. One second they are a vehicle, then they are a bike, then they are a pedestrian traveling at 20km/h atop two wheels.
As for your scenario, okay, I am in the middle lane turning left. I put on my indicator, wait for the vehicle in the left lane to ease back and merge into that lane. If the vehicle in the left lane doesn’t heed the indicator and charges up from behind, running into my car which is at least a vehicle’s length ahead, it is the fault of the vehicle behind who did not stop in time. Like ACTION buses, if they are indicating and you are well behind them, you must give way. This philosophy should go down the order to cyclists, who in this case should give way to a vehicle ahead that is indicating and turning into their lane. It’s called common courtesy. Do you, when seeing someone changing into your lane up ahead, maintain your speed and run into that vehicle because you think you have right of way?
The bike lane right of way rule highlights the ridiculousness of two different rules for two different types of vehicles but occurring in the same circumstance.

So you pass a clyclist, get 100m ahead and then slow down to turn and dont expect them to back up beside you while riding along their lane that you are about to cross?

Would you do that with a car? (hence the point of my question which you missed)

Legally they are both the same thing. Also, you say its too hard to watch for them ect…do you not do a head check and use you mirrors when changing lanes & turning? Especially if you know the rider is there?

All basic road sense.

On the right of way, it is my understanding that cyclists only have absolute right of way in the green lanes. No a vehicle is not allowed to travel in a cycle lane but if a cyclist is faced with a turning car and there is enough room/time (catual, not your percieved time) then the rider has to give way (they are not allowed to follow too close or run into the rear of a vehicle). I thing the whole right of way in a bike lane thing is misunderstood.

So what I am saying is riders have to behave like they are driving a car except for a couple of minor alterations to the road rules.

Should they know this stuff and obey it? Hell yes.

In anwer to your question, if a car is entering the road and I have a green lane? I expect them to give way to me (reality says I obviously have to judge this action pretty well before I take it).

If a car has its indicator on to turn left and has given me plenty of time to acknowldegde the act, then yes I will yeild and let the car do its manouver. Obviously it Raffertys rules if there is an impulsive act by a party and you do what you have to do to avoid an accident.

Anywyay, I had two cars not give way to me yesterday on the green lane that turns left onto London Cct from Northbourne. They were going fast enoigh to avoid hitting me but it would have been no skin off their noses to wait the 3 seconds it took me to negotiate it.

chilli said :

KB 1971, that is a really, really good point. What speed should be permitted in a bike lane? Frankly, I think it must be pretty scary for the gentle, steady-as-she-goes kind of cyclists (ahem, yes, guilty) in the cycle lanes of major roads to have superspeed Lycra chaps whizzing past them, with no warning and in heavy traffic.

I’m aware that some cyclists who want cycling to double as their extreme sport exercise want to be able to pelt along at the maximum speed they can attain, but they pose a danger to other cyclists as well. I’m also aware of the argument that to encourage cycling as a viable transport option, people should be able to go fast to get from A to B in a reasonable time.

But what happens when your cycling priorities conflict with my cycling priorities (which is yes, get there in the end, but as sweat free as possible)? Who has right of way in the cyclist vs cyclist arena? Cycle lanes on roads are pretty narrow and there are already alot of unsympathetic cars around. And now, even with the dedicated, separate (pricey) cycle lanes around Civic, loads of cyclists go on the footpath or go the wrong way up the cycle paths.

It seems many cyclists are natural anarchists, which is all well and good until bones are broken. Some agreed and enforceable rules around bike speed and overtaking, and how to behave in traffic (for everyone) would be welcome by many road users.

I commute almost exclusively on bike lanes , in my lycra and at an average of 25-30km. I rarely have issues with pedestians and most riders. I encounter fast & slow. I like the bike paths because they are quiet and away from the main traffic flow.

Essentially I dont see an issue for the most of it but I do take into account for the busy areas such as Lake Tuggeranong which have children, groups of walkers and a lot of dogs off lead.

With your/my question of what is an appropriate speed? One that you are comfortable with and you can control the situation if it goes bad. That is what I go by.

However, I do see on road bike lanes as better for the faster riders (especially in the faster areas) and bike paths for the slower riders. Despit what is poported here and elsewhere, Canberras paths are excellent, yep there are gaps but for the whole they are excellent and cater for most riders (sports atheletes aside).

I commute for fitness, I leave my extreme cycling for Mt Stromlo…… 🙂

Sandman said :

KB1971 said :

So, you are driving up the middle lane on Northbourne & need to turn left onto Barry Drive. Would you just turn across the path of another vehicle and expect them not hit you when they dont have time to react?

How is this any different to a bicycle in a bike lane.

Also, what speed should a bike be doing in this bike lane?

No, if you wish to turn left onto Barry Dr you’d be in the far left lane, not the middle one. The cycle lane presents a situation that shouldn’t be there and doesn’t exist in regular traffic situations , the need to check behind you to the left in order to turn left from the leftmost possible position you can be in. It’s just plain stupid and makes it impossible for a motorist to plan ahead and be in the correct lane.

Correct answer except the bit about the cycle lane shouldnt be there, they are, this is a fact. When you do a lane change you do a head check to see what is either side and to the rear of you. Its no different when turning left over a cycle lane.

Normally if a cyclist ‘appears out of nowhere’ the driver would have passed them at some point in the last minute. If the fact that the cyclist is there and the car driver has forgotten within a minute that is crux of the issue and why PP think this is a good idea.

Along with driver innattention, ignorance and arrogance to all other road users but that is another thread.

blueterrestra8:58 am 17 Oct 13

OpenYourMind said :

Funnily enough what usually happens at the pedestrian crossings is 1. bike slows down and makes eye contact with driver 2. Driver waves bike through.

For the most part this works for all concerned.

Spot on – this is what happens at least nine times out of ten.

I know I don’t have right of way at a pedestrian crossing – most cyclists understand this. When I approach one I’ll slow down until I can clearly see if there are cars coming; if not, I ride through, otherwise I’ll stop. Most of the time an approaching car will give a wave through and I’ll return the wave (thanks!) and we’re all happy. If on the other hand driver wants to proceed through and not wait for me because I’m still on the bike, then that’s their right and I’ll respect that.

I think most drivers understand that if I get off the bike and walk I’ll take longer. Waving me through saves everyone time. Win-win.

The bottom line is that riding across a pedestrian crossing is akin to jay-walking – we shouldn’t do it but everyone does, and most of the time it’s pain free, but if you get hit by a car on your bike on a pedestrian crossing you’ve got no one to blame but yourself.

thebrownstreak698:50 am 17 Oct 13

OpenYourMind said :

Funnily enough what usually happens at the pedestrian crossings is 1. bike slows down and makes eye contact with driver 2. Driver waves bike through.

For the most part this works for all concerned.

It certainly does. But occasionally it doesn’t, and that’s the problem.

OpenYourMind10:55 pm 16 Oct 13

While I’m all for getting rid of the dismount at pedestrian crossing rule, a good start would be to remove pedestrian crossing markings from areas that are primarily just bike paths anyway. It’s a crazy situation where a cyclist crosses 10 roads using the look for traffic and give way approach, then hits a crossing that happens to be a pedestrian crossing on a cyclepath (call them recreation path if you will).

Funnily enough what usually happens at the pedestrian crossings is 1. bike slows down and makes eye contact with driver 2. Driver waves bike through. For the most part this works for all concerned.

KB1971 said :

wildturkeycanoe said :

Also need one for the back in case the rider goes up ur rear end, and one facing the driver so you can prove you did two shoulder checks before you turned left in front of the cyclist pelting along doing 35 in the bike lane. Guilty until proven innocent is not the Australian way. This is just plain wrong. One set of rules for all vehicles, bicycles included. Not a dozen variations depending on what vehicle you drive.

So, you are driving up the middle lane on Northbourne & need to turn left onto Barry Drive. Would you just turn across the path of another vehicle and expect them not hit you when they dont have time to react?

How is this any different to a bicycle in a bike lane.

Also, what speed should a bike be doing in this bike lane?

We also have variant rules for heavy vehicles, when needed – use multiple lanes of roundabout, turn from a further lane, etc. Basically, when it is physically impossible for them to do otherwise.

That said, I will often pull out of the bike lane, north bound, approaching Barry Drive to save myself from late/non signallers trying to kill me.

wildturkeycanoe7:18 pm 16 Oct 13

KB1971 said :

wildturkeycanoe said :

Also need one for the back in case the rider goes up ur rear end, and one facing the driver so you can prove you did two shoulder checks before you turned left in front of the cyclist pelting along doing 35 in the bike lane. Guilty until proven innocent is not the Australian way. This is just plain wrong. One set of rules for all vehicles, bicycles included. Not a dozen variations depending on what vehicle you drive.

So, you are driving up the middle lane on Northbourne & need to turn left onto Barry Drive. Would you just turn across the path of another vehicle and expect them not hit you when they dont have time to react?

How is this any different to a bicycle in a bike lane.

Also, what speed should a bike be doing in this bike lane?

No, I am not in the middle lane, I am in the left lane, looking to turn left into say – Barry Drive. Because I am in the left lane and doing say 50km/h as I approach the left hand turn slip lane, I am probably looking first to see if a pedestrian is crossing to the island, then looking right to see if any traffic is coming through the intersection. Because there wasn’t any cyclist to my left in the 100 meters or so before getting to the intersection, I have no need to check to the left. Yet, in the time it has taken me to slow down, check crossing and intersection, the cyclist I passed half way back down the block has caught up and comes up to meet my left front fender with a lot of yelling and cursing. If I had to wait for a pedestrian at the crossing, I’d be blocking the bike lane and said cyclist would then whiz through the crossing as well, instead of politely waiting for me to move on.
It’s just a me, me, me attitude with cyclists, wanting right of way no matter which way they want to go. One second they are a vehicle, then they are a bike, then they are a pedestrian traveling at 20km/h atop two wheels.
As for your scenario, okay, I am in the middle lane turning left. I put on my indicator, wait for the vehicle in the left lane to ease back and merge into that lane. If the vehicle in the left lane doesn’t heed the indicator and charges up from behind, running into my car which is at least a vehicle’s length ahead, it is the fault of the vehicle behind who did not stop in time. Like ACTION buses, if they are indicating and you are well behind them, you must give way. This philosophy should go down the order to cyclists, who in this case should give way to a vehicle ahead that is indicating and turning into their lane. It’s called common courtesy. Do you, when seeing someone changing into your lane up ahead, maintain your speed and run into that vehicle because you think you have right of way?
The bike lane right of way rule highlights the ridiculousness of two different rules for two different types of vehicles but occurring in the same circumstance.

KB1971 said :

wildturkeycanoe said :

Also need one for the back in case the rider goes up ur rear end, and one facing the driver so you can prove you did two shoulder checks before you turned left in front of the cyclist pelting along doing 35 in the bike lane. Guilty until proven innocent is not the Australian way. This is just plain wrong. One set of rules for all vehicles, bicycles included. Not a dozen variations depending on what vehicle you drive.

So, you are driving up the middle lane on Northbourne & need to turn left onto Barry Drive. Would you just turn across the path of another vehicle and expect them not hit you when they dont have time to react?

How is this any different to a bicycle in a bike lane.

Also, what speed should a bike be doing in this bike lane?

KB 1971, that is a really, really good point. What speed should be permitted in a bike lane? Frankly, I think it must be pretty scary for the gentle, steady-as-she-goes kind of cyclists (ahem, yes, guilty) in the cycle lanes of major roads to have superspeed Lycra chaps whizzing past them, with no warning and in heavy traffic.

I’m aware that some cyclists who want cycling to double as their extreme sport exercise want to be able to pelt along at the maximum speed they can attain, but they pose a danger to other cyclists as well. I’m also aware of the argument that to encourage cycling as a viable transport option, people should be able to go fast to get from A to B in a reasonable time.

But what happens when your cycling priorities conflict with my cycling priorities (which is yes, get there in the end, but as sweat free as possible)? Who has right of way in the cyclist vs cyclist arena? Cycle lanes on roads are pretty narrow and there are already alot of unsympathetic cars around. And now, even with the dedicated, separate (pricey) cycle lanes around Civic, loads of cyclists go on the footpath or go the wrong way up the cycle paths.

It seems many cyclists are natural anarchists, which is all well and good until bones are broken. Some agreed and enforceable rules around bike speed and overtaking, and how to behave in traffic (for everyone) would be welcome by many road users.

harvyk1 said :

Here is a thought, and no I’m not trolling, I’m been serious. Why not make all accidents the cyclists fault unless it can be proved otherwise?

You’re actively choosing to take a vehicle into an environment, which has a top speed far below just about every other vehicle in that environment. That vehicle is missing the majority of protections which most other vehicles in that environment enjoy, and in the event of an accident, you will be coming off second best.

So as a cyclist, you have made the choice to enter a dangerous environment ill-equipped to properly deal with that environment. So as a result, should anything go wrong whilst in that environment, it should be the person who chose to make the environment more dangerous than it needs be by creating an obstacle traveling at half the speed to all other road users.

I’m not stating that cyclists shouldn’t be on the roads (well I am when there is a for purpose cycle path right next to the road), but the responsibility of ensuring safe usage of the road should fall on the person who chose to use a vehicle which is incapable of traveling the speed limit in most cases.

Just food for thought…

Isn’t that kind of a “you asked for a bad thing to happen to you” kind of response to the problem, though? I don’t think that’s the right attitude to take towards the victim of any crime.

Yes, I think that it should be a legal requirement for cyclists to use an off road bike path if there’s one available (after all we’ve all paid for it to be there and it’s clearly safer for cyclists to be away from the traffic), but I don’t think it’s reasonable for cyclists to have to assume MORE liability than motor vehicles for being on the road (when legal and appropriate).

harvyk1 said :

Here is a thought, and no I’m not trolling, I’m been serious. Why not make all accidents the cyclists fault unless it can be proved otherwise?

You’re actively choosing to take a vehicle into an environment, which has a top speed far below just about every other vehicle in that environment. That vehicle is missing the majority of protections which most other vehicles in that environment enjoy, and in the event of an accident, you will be coming off second best.

So as a cyclist, you have made the choice to enter a dangerous environment ill-equipped to properly deal with that environment. So as a result, should anything go wrong whilst in that environment, it should be the person who chose to make the environment more dangerous than it needs be by creating an obstacle traveling at half the speed to all other road users.

I’m not stating that cyclists shouldn’t be on the roads (well I am when there is a for purpose cycle path right next to the road), but the responsibility of ensuring safe usage of the road should fall on the person who chose to use a vehicle which is incapable of traveling the speed limit in most cases.

Just food for thought…

How’s your Jim’s Mowing franchise going harvyk1?

KB1971 said :

So, you are driving up the middle lane on Northbourne & need to turn left onto Barry Drive. Would you just turn across the path of another vehicle and expect them not hit you when they dont have time to react?

How is this any different to a bicycle in a bike lane.

Also, what speed should a bike be doing in this bike lane?

No, if you wish to turn left onto Barry Dr you’d be in the far left lane, not the middle one. The cycle lane presents a situation that shouldn’t be there and doesn’t exist in regular traffic situations , the need to check behind you to the left in order to turn left from the leftmost possible position you can be in. It’s just plain stupid and makes it impossible for a motorist to plan ahead and be in the correct lane.

harvyk1 said :

howeph said :

Exactly!

In order to go straight ahead, I can:

a) Choose to dice with death by leaving the bike path, entering and then cross, the traffic flow. When I get to the lights I’m going to use that verge beside the bus (sure, it’s not an official bike lane) so as to increase the buffer space between me and vehicle traffic. This is what Queen_of_the_Bun would have me do every time.

or

b) Use the pedestrian crossing.

In light traffic I do (a); otherwise I do (b).

So what you are saying is you make the active choice to ignore road instructions because they do not suit you?

Which road instructions have I ignored? As a cyclist in the ACT I can: ride on the road (option a); or ride on the footpath (option b). I will do what ever I judge is safest and practicable – it’s called being a responsible adult.

harvyk1 said :

If a driver decided to ignore a road rule (eg crossing double lines) because it was inconvenient to wait for say a B double to first safely negotiate that piece of road, well we all know how that can end…

Not a valid comparison. I haven’t ignored any road instructions and the driver wouldn’t be doing what’s safe… which is what I’m doing.

Also note it is perfectly possible to drive recklessly and dangerously whilst simultaneously obeying all road instructions. It’s why evolution gave us the ability to judge what’s safe and what isn’t.

wildturkeycanoe said :

Also need one for the back in case the rider goes up ur rear end, and one facing the driver so you can prove you did two shoulder checks before you turned left in front of the cyclist pelting along doing 35 in the bike lane. Guilty until proven innocent is not the Australian way. This is just plain wrong. One set of rules for all vehicles, bicycles included. Not a dozen variations depending on what vehicle you drive.

So, you are driving up the middle lane on Northbourne & need to turn left onto Barry Drive. Would you just turn across the path of another vehicle and expect them not hit you when they dont have time to react?

How is this any different to a bicycle in a bike lane.

Also, what speed should a bike be doing in this bike lane?

Holden Caulfield said :

KB1971 said :

Sorry, I did jump the gun a bit but you did just point out that PP “wants” stuff…

No need to apologise.

However, I did also point out:

“That claim forms a small part of their submission”

and

“Despite a bit of “steel cocoon” rhetoric there’s some decent points being made.”

I have only skimmed over the full document, but saw enough to see that, aside from the obvious headline grabbers, there’s a lot of merit in much of the content.

I do admit, in the past, I was far less tolerant of cyclists in the main. But with age comes wisdom, or at least an attempt to try and gain some, haha.

The other bit from PP to strike a chord was the suggestion motorists may need to go back to school to learn the road rules in regards to the rights of cyclists. I agree that is probably a fair and reasonable position to hold. It’s just that, well, it’s kind of cute to hold that position when no qualification or demonstrated knowledge of the road rules is a prerequisite to riding a bike on the road.

Anyway, peace, love and happiness.

Thats why I apologised for jumping the gun 😉

On your last bit, yes that is an oddity but I guess that the law figures that most people over the age of 16 who ride bikes would have a licence and therefore would know the rules? I often wonder why people who do both dont do them the same.

Holden Caulfield4:29 pm 16 Oct 13

KB1971 said :

Sorry, I did jump the gun a bit but you did just point out that PP “wants” stuff…

No need to apologise.

However, I did also point out:

“That claim forms a small part of their submission”

and

“Despite a bit of “steel cocoon” rhetoric there’s some decent points being made.”

I have only skimmed over the full document, but saw enough to see that, aside from the obvious headline grabbers, there’s a lot of merit in much of the content.

I do admit, in the past, I was far less tolerant of cyclists in the main. But with age comes wisdom, or at least an attempt to try and gain some, haha.

The other bit from PP to strike a chord was the suggestion motorists may need to go back to school to learn the road rules in regards to the rights of cyclists. I agree that is probably a fair and reasonable position to hold. It’s just that, well, it’s kind of cute to hold that position when no qualification or demonstrated knowledge of the road rules is a prerequisite to riding a bike on the road.

Anyway, peace, love and happiness.

Dilandach said :

Queen_of_the_Bun said :

For all those cyclists who say drivers should have to get out and push their cars across pedestrian crossings.

Are there really people that stupid enough to try on that dumbass argument?

I, for one, have never seen a car use a pedestrian crossing, but if a car was to do so I would expect its driver should be breathalysed and drug-tested forthwith.

wildturkeycanoe3:52 pm 16 Oct 13

Maybe everyone who drives a car should become paranoidal nerve wrecks every time they drive on a road. I mean, you just never know when a bicycle may come hurtling across your path, come up behind you from the left hand side in your blind spot or just whiz past your driver’s side mirror whilst you wait at the lights. Better put a dash cam in now while they are cheap, the demand is certainly going to push the prices up. Also need one for the back in case the rider goes up ur rear end, and one facing the driver so you can prove you did two shoulder checks before you turned left in front of the cyclist pelting along doing 35 in the bike lane. Guilty until proven innocent is not the Australian way. This is just plain wrong. One set of rules for all vehicles, bicycles included. Not a dozen variations depending on what vehicle you drive.

Holden Caulfield said :

KB1971 said :

Please report the facts, not the bias.

Lighten up.

It was the liability issue, which I first saw on the PP website, that caught my attention and prompted me to start the discussion. Nobody has prevented you from reporting your own facts or from getting on your well worn soapbox and having your say in this thread.

I have said before that my preference would be to separate cyclists from motorists for the benefit and safety of all. Alas, the chances of that ever happening are as good as nil. Therefore, I’m more than willing to play my role as a member of society and when on foot or in my car I’ll always do my best to look out for and accommodate cyclists, as well as all other road users.

Sorry, I did jump the gun a bit but you did just point out that PP “wants” stuff, there are 16 other submissions there which may or may not have disagreeable suggestions in them. Even the CT didnt do that.

Queen_of_the_Bun said :

So are you saying that drivers need to be educated in how to drive around cyclists? I agree. I also think cyclists need to be educated in how to ride around cars, motorbikes and trucks. However, that’s never going to happen is it?

Nope, all I am saying is that it is a submission. There are other parts to the story other than just the paragraph quoted. I bet I could pick something from the MRA’s submission and twist it into something its not.

Just trying to get the thread a bit more balanced with the overall facts thats all. Pedal Power do recognise that there are issues on all sides, sometimes it takes an outlandish suggestion to get a ball rolling.

My personal opinion?

I cringe ever time I see a single speeding, no helmeted ninja from the ANU fly across Northbourne Ave not obeying any rule at all. I also have a go at riders who run red lights and I have also seen riders riding down the wrong way on main roads. But I have also seen so many car drivers that have the same flagrant disregard for the law.

The big issue here, as Holden pointed out was people need to take a chill pill and think of others. I have little issues on the road when I give plenty of notice of my intentions. Even then, yesterday I wanted to turn right to go to my kids school to pick them up, I looked over my shoulder and saw an old Daihastu 4WD coming up the road about 100m behind me so I swung my arm out to give him plenty of notice that I wanted to turn right. Despite this he still flew up behind me like he wasnt going to let me turn and locked up the brakes as if to say “You didnt give me enough notice dickhead!!” This is in a 50 zone where I should be right.

This is the behavior I have an issue with, the I need to get in front of you becuse you are on a bike and you dont matter.

On the accident fault, I know someone that was knocked off his bike by someone turning on him when he had right of way. Most of the accidents that happen between motor vehicles and bikes are not because of the pedestrian crossing thing, its at intersections where vehicles/bikes are turning across traffic. I have nearly been cleaned up a number of times like this. To me strict liability would make sense in these situations where its obvious that the car was a fault. IF, and that is a big if, the Gov decide its a good idea, I would imagine the legislation would not be that simple as suggested in the OP.

History shows that the walking across pedestrian crossings rule is redundant, its not killing people. No one is obeying the rule so there seems to be no reason for it. As someone said in the CT article, it is silly that we can ride on foot paths but not on corssings. In my commute I rarely see near misses.

Anyway, no doubt this afternoon I will have to be careful I dont get hit by a car cutting the corners on Vernon Circle, no one pulls out on me at the off ramp for Parkes Way to Comm Ave, the old bloke who walks with the stick doesnt hit me on Comm Bridge (as he has done in the past), I avoid the idiot cyclists who dont know how to pass & push you over to one side of the path, the joggers and walkers that dont watch what they are doing, the people walking dogs off lead and the maniacs doing power slides on roundabouts when I am waiting to cross scaring shit out of me.

Aside form all of that, is riding the best way to get to work? You bet.

Holden Caulfield3:32 pm 16 Oct 13

KB1971 said :

Please report the facts, not the bias.

Lighten up.

It was the liability issue, which I first saw on the PP website, that caught my attention and prompted me to start the discussion. Nobody has prevented you from reporting your own facts or from getting on your well worn soapbox and having your say in this thread.

I have said before that my preference would be to separate cyclists from motorists for the benefit and safety of all. Alas, the chances of that ever happening are as good as nil. Therefore, I’m more than willing to play my role as a member of society and when on foot or in my car I’ll always do my best to look out for and accommodate cyclists, as well as all other road users.

Earl said :

Hmm I’m not sure I really agree with fault lying with the driver unless proven innocent, but I can’t see how any rational person would believe having cyclists assumed to be at fault would be a good idea. You do realise this means anyone could just mow down any cyclist and kill them without fault (how do you prove innocence when you are dead?)

Or is “I’m not trolling” akin to “I’m not racist, but” …..

It was simply offering an alternate view on the “sun shines out of cyclists arse’s” point of view which pedal power pushes.

I do believe that the cyclist has a larger duty of care than the motorists given that they have chosen to ride in a dangerous environment against things much larger and much faster than them.

When I used to ride, I would always treat the roads with the greatest of respect, simply because at the end of the day I am nothing more than a speed bump when compared to a 4×4…

howeph said :

Exactly!

In order to go straight ahead, I can:

a) Choose to dice with death by leaving the bike path, entering and then cross, the traffic flow. When I get to the lights I’m going to use that verge beside the bus (sure, it’s not an official bike lane) so as to increase the buffer space between me and vehicle traffic. This is what Queen_of_the_Bun would have me do every time.

or

b) Use the pedestrian crossing.

In light traffic I do (a); otherwise I do (b).

So what you are saying is you make the active choice to ignore road instructions because they do not suit you?

If a driver decided to ignore a road rule (eg crossing double lines) because it was inconvenient to wait for say a B double to first safely negotiate that piece of road, well we all know how that can end…

harvyk1 said :

Here is a thought, and no I’m not trolling, I’m been serious. Why not make all accidents the cyclists fault unless it can be proved otherwise?

You’re actively choosing to take a vehicle into an environment, which has a top speed far below just about every other vehicle in that environment. That vehicle is missing the majority of protections which most other vehicles in that environment enjoy, and in the event of an accident, you will be coming off second best.

So as a cyclist, you have made the choice to enter a dangerous environment ill-equipped to properly deal with that environment. So as a result, should anything go wrong whilst in that environment, it should be the person who chose to make the environment more dangerous than it needs be by creating an obstacle traveling at half the speed to all other road users.

I’m not stating that cyclists shouldn’t be on the roads (well I am when there is a for purpose cycle path right next to the road), but the responsibility of ensuring safe usage of the road should fall on the person who chose to use a vehicle which is incapable of traveling the speed limit in most cases.

Just food for thought…

Hmm I’m not sure I really agree with fault lying with the driver unless proven innocent, but I can’t see how any rational person would believe having cyclists assumed to be at fault would be a good idea. You do realise this means anyone could just mow down any cyclist and kill them without fault (how do you prove innocence when you are dead?)

Or is “I’m not trolling” akin to “I’m not racist, but” …..

Queen_of_the_Bun3:02 pm 16 Oct 13

howeph said :

davo101 said :

howeph said :

to the go straight ahead cycle lane, next to the bus

Err, that’s not a bike lane. There are a few hints as to why:

1. There is no bike symbol painted on the ground
2. The line markings indicate you can’t ride over that part of the road
3. There is an arrow directing cyclist up the ramp to the left
4. They’ve built a ramp for the bicycles
5. There is a sign stating that the bike lane ends.

Exactly!

In order to go straight ahead, I can:

a) Choose to dice with death by leaving the bike path, entering and then cross, the traffic flow. When I get to the lights I’m going to use that verge beside the bus (sure, it’s not an official bike lane) so as to increase the buffer space between me and vehicle traffic. This is what Queen_of_the_Bun would have me do every time.

or

b) Use the pedestrian crossing.

In light traffic I do (a); otherwise I do (b).

No problems with you using the pedestrian crossing. On foot. Eg like a pedestrian would.
At that intersection, it would often be faster for me as a driver to mount the footpath. But that’s not legal. So I don’t do it.

davo101 said :

howeph said :

to the go straight ahead cycle lane, next to the bus

Err, that’s not a bike lane. There are a few hints as to why:

1. There is no bike symbol painted on the ground
2. The line markings indicate you can’t ride over that part of the road
3. There is an arrow directing cyclist up the ramp to the left
4. They’ve built a ramp for the bicycles
5. There is a sign stating that the bike lane ends.

Exactly!

In order to go straight ahead, I can:

a) Choose to dice with death by leaving the bike path, entering and then cross, the traffic flow. When I get to the lights I’m going to use that verge beside the bus (sure, it’s not an official bike lane) so as to increase the buffer space between me and vehicle traffic. This is what Queen_of_the_Bun would have me do every time.

or

b) Use the pedestrian crossing.

In light traffic I do (a); otherwise I do (b).

howeph said :

to the go straight ahead cycle lane, next to the bus

Err, that’s not a bike lane. There are a few hints as to why:

1. There is no bike symbol painted on the ground
2. The line markings indicate you can’t ride over that part of the road
3. There is an arrow directing cyclist up the ramp to the left
4. They’ve built a ramp for the bicycles
5. There is a sign stating that the bike lane ends.

Queen_of_the_Bun2:07 pm 16 Oct 13

KB1971 said :

Hang on, hang on, hang on…….cherry picking a couple of bits to promote your story eh?

What about this then (take from the same document):

Education and cultural change measures:
? highlight in road safety campaigns: cycling as a norm, ie a healthy, convenient and legitimate use of our roads with benefits for all road users and the community in general the accepted road user hierarchy the action or behaviour that causes crashes and injuries, rather than blaming the victim the mutual obligations of all road users to take care to avoid inuring themselves and others
and weight the allocation of campaign resources in accordance with that hierarchy;
? revise the handbooks for drivers who are new, older or of heavy vehicles
? to introduce the concept of the road user hierarchy
? to provide guidance on interacting with vulnerable road users
? the to better emphasise the road rules drivers must observe when encountering people when they are walking or riding on roads;
? assess this knowledge in practical and theoretical licence tests;
? continue with free distribution in winter of visibility aids such as bike lights
? promote among driving instructors and bus, taxi, delivery and truck delivery drivers an awareness of vulnerable road users and how best to interact with them;
? promote an awareness of road rules, responsibilities and courtesies that apply to people when they ride bicycles, through targeted programs such as those aimed at children riding to school and commuters cycling to work and those that cycling clubs conduct for new riders
? give greater priority to the safety of cyclists and pedestrians

And then there is this:

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/whos-at-fault-when-cyclists-and-cars-collide-20131015-2vjsp.html

In submissions to an ACT Assembly inquiry into vulnerable road users, law firm Maurice Blackburn and the Motorcycle Riders Association of the ACT have both called for a feasibility study on the impact of introducing “strict liability”.

This paragraph take from the CT report.

Here is the real story: http://www.parliament.act.gov.au/in-committees/standing_committees/Planning,-Environment-and-Territory-and-Municipal-Services/inquiry-into-vulnerable-road-users

So, while Pedal Power have put in a submission, it WASNT only them that called for strict liability. Pedal Power also want to promote better behavior from riders (always have done).

Please report the facts, not the bias.

So are you saying that drivers need to be educated in how to drive around cyclists? I agree. I also think cyclists need to be educated in how to ride around cars, motorbikes and trucks. However, that’s never going to happen is it?

pink little birdie1:47 pm 16 Oct 13

KB1971 said :

Hang on, hang on, hang on…….cherry picking a couple of bits to promote your story eh?

What about this then (take from the same document):

Education and cultural change measures:
? highlight in road safety campaigns: cycling as a norm, ie a healthy, convenient and legitimate use of our roads with benefits for all road users and the community in general the accepted road user hierarchy the action or behaviour that causes crashes and injuries, rather than blaming the victim the mutual obligations of all road users to take care to avoid inuring themselves and others
and weight the allocation of campaign resources in accordance with that hierarchy;
? revise the handbooks for drivers who are new, older or of heavy vehicles
? to introduce the concept of the road user hierarchy
? to provide guidance on interacting with vulnerable road users
? the to better emphasise the road rules drivers must observe when encountering people when they are walking or riding on roads;
? assess this knowledge in practical and theoretical licence tests;
? continue with free distribution in winter of visibility aids such as bike lights
? promote among driving instructors and bus, taxi, delivery and truck delivery drivers an awareness of vulnerable road users and how best to interact with them;
? promote an awareness of road rules, responsibilities and courtesies that apply to people when they ride bicycles, through targeted programs such as those aimed at children riding to school and commuters cycling to work and those that cycling clubs conduct for new riders
? give greater priority to the safety of cyclists and pedestrians

And then there is this:

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/whos-at-fault-when-cyclists-and-cars-collide-20131015-2vjsp.html

In submissions to an ACT Assembly inquiry into vulnerable road users, law firm Maurice Blackburn and the Motorcycle Riders Association of the ACT have both called for a feasibility study on the impact of introducing “strict liability”.

This paragraph take from the CT report.

Here is the real story: http://www.parliament.act.gov.au/in-committees/standing_committees/Planning,-Environment-and-Territory-and-Municipal-Services/inquiry-into-vulnerable-road-users

So, while Pedal Power have put in a submission, it WASNT only them that called for strict liability. Pedal Power also want to promote better behavior from riders (always have done).

Please report the facts, not the bias.

Bring back the police cycle safety centre in Belconnen.

Here is a thought, and no I’m not trolling, I’m been serious. Why not make all accidents the cyclists fault unless it can be proved otherwise?

You’re actively choosing to take a vehicle into an environment, which has a top speed far below just about every other vehicle in that environment. That vehicle is missing the majority of protections which most other vehicles in that environment enjoy, and in the event of an accident, you will be coming off second best.

So as a cyclist, you have made the choice to enter a dangerous environment ill-equipped to properly deal with that environment. So as a result, should anything go wrong whilst in that environment, it should be the person who chose to make the environment more dangerous than it needs be by creating an obstacle traveling at half the speed to all other road users.

I’m not stating that cyclists shouldn’t be on the roads (well I am when there is a for purpose cycle path right next to the road), but the responsibility of ensuring safe usage of the road should fall on the person who chose to use a vehicle which is incapable of traveling the speed limit in most cases.

Just food for thought…

Holden Caulfield1:17 pm 16 Oct 13

Oh, I forgot to mention, while walking to work this morning, I observed a cyclist riding in an on-road cycle lane against the flow of traffic (ie. in the wrong direction).

Now, about that automatic motorists’ fault clause again!

Queen_of_the_Bun said :

I really hate the proposal to stop cyclists dismounting before crossing a PEDESTRIAN CROSSING. The reason they are pedestrian crossings is because pedestrians are largely visible and travel at walking speed. My most anxious driving moment is turning left from Captain Cook Crescent onto Canberra Av at Manuka. Left hand turn for drivers if safe. Cyclists who are going straight ahead have their own lane. Yet the number of cyclists who prefer to use the pedestrian crossing and then go straight ahead is appalling. It is very dangerous and one of the things that really annoys drivers

Hi, Queen_of_the_Bun,

I ride this route on my commute, and nine time out of ten I do exactly what you hate. An I do it because it is the safest way to get across this intersection.

Look at the intersection from a cyclists perspective:

Google Street View Link (give it time to load to streetview – it load the satelite view first)

To get from the cycle lane, at the far left, to the go straight ahead cycle lane, next to the bus, the cyclist has to cross your lane. In light traffic that’s not a problem. Earlier on, before this point, I pick a gap, stick my right hand out and move across, temporarily taking control of the “left turn” lane in order to go straight ahead. But in heavy traffic you end up surrounded by cars and are forced to lane split to get to the safety of the straight ahead lane. Performing this maneuver requires me to put my life into the hands of the drivers around me.

The alternative is to pop up onto the footpath at the end of the bike lane. Do a little dog leg turn so that I’m now lined up to cross on the pedestrian crossing. I am now crossing perpendicular to the left turn lane allowing me to eye-ball the drivers directly, ensuring that they have seen me before I cross; or stop if they haven’t. This way the safety of my life stays in my control the whole time. I don’t have to trust it to a stranger of unknown driving ability and traffic awareness.

Queen_of_the_Bun12:46 pm 16 Oct 13

Grail said :

Going straight ahead there for a cyclist means crossing a lane of cars. As a cyclist, crossing the lane of cars at a marked crossing is more attractive than crossing a lane of traffic in the middle of a busy flow.

There is a gap of about 80m for the bikes to cross that left-hand lane of traffic before the bikes-only lane. That is insufficient time for a cyclist to cope with the usual car drivers.

Sure, the people doing it are being lazy and not bothering to indicate their intention to leave the road for the shared pedestrian path (cyclists are pedestrian traffic too), but the issue still remains that they are damned if they do, damned if they don’t.

There are no dedicated footpaths in Canberra, and the few bicycle crossing lights we have were installed to address the rules about dismounting at pedestrian crossings. So you can save the expense of installing extra sets of lights at every crossing by simply repealing the “dismount when crossing” law and relying on the growing number of dashcams to provide context to any accident review.

Grail said :

Going straight ahead there for a cyclist means crossing a lane of cars. As a cyclist, crossing the lane of cars at a marked crossing is more attractive than crossing a lane of traffic in the middle of a busy flow.

There is a gap of about 80m for the bikes to cross that left-hand lane of traffic before the bikes-only lane. That is insufficient time for a cyclist to cope with the usual car drivers.

Sure, the people doing it are being lazy and not bothering to indicate their intention to leave the road for the shared pedestrian path (cyclists are pedestrian traffic too), but the issue still remains that they are damned if they do, damned if they don’t.

There are no dedicated footpaths in Canberra, and the few bicycle crossing lights we have were installed to address the rules about dismounting at pedestrian crossings. So you can save the expense of installing extra sets of lights at every crossing by simply repealing the “dismount when crossing” law and relying on the growing number of dashcams to provide context to any accident review.

I don’t think that’s correct. There is a dedicated bike lane along Captain Cook Cres, along with a dedicated bike lane at the lights for riders going straight ahead. If riders need to turn right, then okay, it may be safer to use the pedestrian crossing but that doesn’t mean they should be able to just whiz out at cyclist speed where drivers are expecting pedestrians.

And why should drivers have to install cameras just to prove who was in the wrong? How is that going to help anyone who is in a coma after riding out in front of a car?

thebrownstreak6912:33 pm 16 Oct 13

Dilandach said :

Queen_of_the_Bun said :

For all those cyclists who say drivers should have to get out and push their cars across pedestrian crossings.

Are there really people that stupid enough to try on that dumbass argument?

There are enough stupid cyclists who nearly get cleaned up for it to be an entirely legitimate argument.

As far as putting the onus on the driver to prove it was the cyclist’s fault, probably not much of an issue. It can be kinda hard to say ‘hey you’re lying’ when you’ve been turned into raspberry jam on the road.

Of course, most motorist v cyclist problems could be solved if more road users, regardless of their mode of transport, were prepared to chill a little and act with a greater sense of calm and cooperation.

True, but unlikely.

Queen_of_the_Bun said :

I really hate the proposal to stop cyclists dismounting before crossing a PEDESTRIAN CROSSING. The reason they are pedestrian crossings is because pedestrians are largely visible and travel at walking speed. My most anxious driving moment is turning left from Captain Cook Crescent onto Canberra Av at Manuka. Left hand turn for drivers if safe. Cyclists who are going straight ahead have their own lane. Yet the number of cyclists who prefer to use the pedestrian crossing and then go straight ahead is appalling. It is very dangerous and one of the things that really annoys drivers.

Cyclists don’t have their own lane to go straight ahead. They need to cross the left-turning lane with traffic behind in order to continue onto Manuka Circle. The Captain Cook left-hand bicycle lane ends at the pedestrian crossing. A simple look at GoogleMap satellite would confirm this.

Why is it an anxious driving moment for you? It’s a clearly marked intersection, and the crossing has clear lines of vision and pedestrian approaches. It’s not that hard, unless you’re wholly focussed on beating the traffic when turning onto Canberra Avenue.

Haven’t read the report but I think this would be a good thing. I think some countries overseas operate on this principle without any problem. Most drivers instinctively slow down when there are cyclists and pedestrians about, minimising the risk of accident or injury anyway and, probably, it would adversely affect only those drivers who insist on doing the speed limit no matter what. It might encourage an uptake of cameras too – which could only be a good thing.

As for pedestrian crossings, cyclists should be allowed to ride across provided they stop first. They shouldn’t have to dismount but they certainly shouldn’t cross at speed or without eyeballing the driver.

pink little birdie12:25 pm 16 Oct 13

Today there was pathworks on Ginninderra Drive, edge of Lawson. They are moving the path out, making it gravel, towards the road and the fence to where the path is. There is no path on the other side of Gininderra drive. This seems Jerky to me.

TAMS could we please have a path running along Ginninderra drive all the way where Ginninderra drive bounds UC. Particuarly as construction will make that side of the road inconvient
to cycle along. (Anybody else know where I talk to TAMS to get this path)

“place the responsibility for a crash involving a bicycle and another vehicle on the driver of the other vehicle, unless the driver can prove that the person on the bicycle was clearly at fault – so that the person in the most dangerous vehicle has the most responsibility”

I think this is a terrible idea considering the “pick-and-choose” approach to road rules that a great number of cyclists adopt.

I wonder about one legged cyclists and people riding hand cycles because their legs don’t work.

Hang on, hang on, hang on…….cherry picking a couple of bits to promote your story eh?

What about this then (take from the same document):

Education and cultural change measures:
? highlight in road safety campaigns: cycling as a norm, ie a healthy, convenient and legitimate use of our roads with benefits for all road users and the community in general the accepted road user hierarchy the action or behaviour that causes crashes and injuries, rather than blaming the victim the mutual obligations of all road users to take care to avoid inuring themselves and others
and weight the allocation of campaign resources in accordance with that hierarchy;
? revise the handbooks for drivers who are new, older or of heavy vehicles
? to introduce the concept of the road user hierarchy
? to provide guidance on interacting with vulnerable road users
? the to better emphasise the road rules drivers must observe when encountering people when they are walking or riding on roads;
? assess this knowledge in practical and theoretical licence tests;
? continue with free distribution in winter of visibility aids such as bike lights
? promote among driving instructors and bus, taxi, delivery and truck delivery drivers an awareness of vulnerable road users and how best to interact with them;
? promote an awareness of road rules, responsibilities and courtesies that apply to people when they ride bicycles, through targeted programs such as those aimed at children riding to school and commuters cycling to work and those that cycling clubs conduct for new riders
? give greater priority to the safety of cyclists and pedestrians

And then there is this:

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/whos-at-fault-when-cyclists-and-cars-collide-20131015-2vjsp.html

In submissions to an ACT Assembly inquiry into vulnerable road users, law firm Maurice Blackburn and the Motorcycle Riders Association of the ACT have both called for a feasibility study on the impact of introducing “strict liability”.

This paragraph take from the CT report.

Here is the real story: http://www.parliament.act.gov.au/in-committees/standing_committees/Planning,-Environment-and-Territory-and-Municipal-Services/inquiry-into-vulnerable-road-users

So, while Pedal Power have put in a submission, it WASNT only them that called for strict liability. Pedal Power also want to promote better behavior from riders (always have done).

Please report the facts, not the bias.

HiddenDragon11:48 am 16 Oct 13

“Ultimate cyclist troll” – that’s a contradiction in terms – it would be like the big bang (of the universe…) in reverse, and probably a breach of bloggers’ human rights (and blog proprietors rights under competition law).

Has a RiotAct thread ever made it to four figures? – could this be the one?

Stand back, folks, this one should go off !!

For what it’s worth, as both regular cyclist and driver – nah, disagree. Presumption of guilt is a rotten principle wherever it is applied.

But as you say, Holden Caulfield, there are some good points in the rest of the submission, such as around infrastructure design, awareness raising, etc.

Guess it is the role of an advocacy organisation to overgild the lily sometimes, so that you might get a result somewhere in the reasonable middle. Though it does mean opponents will seize on the more ‘out there’ stuff to rubbish you – but they were always gonna be opponents anyway !

Going straight ahead there for a cyclist means crossing a lane of cars. As a cyclist, crossing the lane of cars at a marked crossing is more attractive than crossing a lane of traffic in the middle of a busy flow.

There is a gap of about 80m for the bikes to cross that left-hand lane of traffic before the bikes-only lane. That is insufficient time for a cyclist to cope with the usual car drivers.

Sure, the people doing it are being lazy and not bothering to indicate their intention to leave the road for the shared pedestrian path (cyclists are pedestrian traffic too), but the issue still remains that they are damned if they do, damned if they don’t.

There are no dedicated footpaths in Canberra, and the few bicycle crossing lights we have were installed to address the rules about dismounting at pedestrian crossings. So you can save the expense of installing extra sets of lights at every crossing by simply repealing the “dismount when crossing” law and relying on the growing number of dashcams to provide context to any accident review.

Queen_of_the_Bun said :

For all those cyclists who say drivers should have to get out and push their cars across pedestrian crossings.

Are there really people that stupid enough to try on that dumbass argument?

Queen_of_the_Bun11:17 am 16 Oct 13

I really hate the proposal to stop cyclists dismounting before crossing a PEDESTRIAN CROSSING. The reason they are pedestrian crossings is because pedestrians are largely visible and travel at walking speed. My most anxious driving moment is turning left from Captain Cook Crescent onto Canberra Av at Manuka. Left hand turn for drivers if safe. Cyclists who are going straight ahead have their own lane. Yet the number of cyclists who prefer to use the pedestrian crossing and then go straight ahead is appalling. It is very dangerous and one of the things that really annoys drivers.

For all those cyclists who say drivers should have to get out and push their cars across pedestrian crossings, I just say, we are only allowed to drive on the road. We don’t have the luxury of riding in bike lanes or the footpath or on the road. If we drove on the footpath, we would very rightly be punished.

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